Kneisel v. Ursus Motor Co.

238 Ill. App. 50, 1925 Ill. App. LEXIS 222
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 14, 1925
DocketGen. No. 29,474
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 238 Ill. App. 50 (Kneisel v. Ursus Motor Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kneisel v. Ursus Motor Co., 238 Ill. App. 50, 1925 Ill. App. LEXIS 222 (Ill. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Gridley

delivered the opinion of the. court.

By this writ of error Harry J. Myerson seeks to reverse an order of the circuit court of Cook county, entered May 13, 1924, dismissing for want of prosecution his intervening petition, filed on March 11, 1924, in the pending chancery cause of Kneisel et al. v. Ursus Motor Company et al. (hereinafter referred to as the Ursus case).

The bill in the Ursus case, filed March 2, 1922, by certain minority stockholders of the Ursus Motor Company, prayed for an accounting and other relief. Myerson was one of the solicitors filing the bill, and on the day of its filing Jacob Goldman was appointed1 receiver of the company and he qualified and took possession. The Ursus case had been assigned to the calendar of Judge Rush, one of the judges of the circuit court, and Goldman was acting as receiver in many other chancery causes pending in said court. On April 20, 1923, the executive committee of the judges of the court, acting under the rules of the court, reassigned the Ursus case to Judge Scanlan, another of the judges of the court, and he conducted an investigation of Goldman’s acts and doings as receiver in the Ursus case. Subsequently the executive committee ordered that a separate chancery calendar be prepared of all causes in which Goldman had acted as receiver and that all said causes be assigned to Judge Scanlan. As a result of the investigation in the Ursus case and “upon evidence adduced and heard in open court,” the court (Judge Scanlain), on May 14, 1923, entered an order removing Goldman as receiver in the Ursus case and appointed in his stead the Chicago Title & Trust Company, and it took possession and entered upon its duties. The court reserved jurisdiction to pass upon and determine all matters or claims by or against Goldman, including all claims and liens by him for services and disbursements and further ordered that he forthwith deliver to the new receiver all property, books, etc., in his possession, and that within 10 days he file with the clerk a full and complete account under oath of his acts, doings, receipts and disbursements, together with vouchers. No account was filed by him.

On May 28,1923, the court entered a draft order, entitled in the Ursus case and containing a recital and many findings, in which Myers on in the alternative was directed either to pay to said new receiver, Chicago Title & Trust Company, on May 31, 1923, at 10 o’clock a. m., the sum of $4,883.25, subject to his right to be reimbursed for the services and expenses, or any part thereof, mentioned in the findings, “or in default * * * of such payment by him * * * that he then and there, in open court, show cause, if any he have, why he shall not have complied with this order and rule.” And it was further ordered that upon the payment of said sum to the new receiver Myerson be° given leave within 60 days “to file his intervening petition, or petitions, making claim for services and expenses rendered by him to said Jacob Goldman, as receiver, in any of the causes hereinbefore mentioned, or setting up any other lawful claim or demand he may have against any of the estates, or funds thereof, in the aforesaid causes, or contesting the propriety of this order directing the repayment, as aforesaid, of said $4,883.25, or any part thereof.” On the following day Myerson paid to said new receiver the sum of $4,883.25.

In the recital in said order it is stated that the cause came on to be heard “upon the court’s own motion” to investigate Goldman’s conduct as receiver in the Ursus case and his fitness to continue as receiver, and to determine whether he has in his possession and control the estate which came to him as receiver, and to discover and recover such of the assets of the estate as the court should find have been improperly expended by him, and that the court “heard the evidence adduced in open court, including the testimony of Jacob Goldman and the testimony of Harry J. Myerson.” Then follow findings that the court has jurisdiction of the parties and of said Goldman and said Myerson and of the subject matter; that Goldman “has commingled the assets he has collected, as receiver in this estate, with assets he has collected in a large number of other estates, including all of the estates involved in the several causes hereinafter mentioned,” in which Myerson has been paid moneys by Goldman, receiver, “without any court order authorizing the same”; that Myerson claims that such payments were for legal services and expenses as hereinafter set forth; that Goldman during all of the time has had no assets other than those belonging to the estates of which he was appointed receiver, that he kept bank accounts in the name of “Jacob Goldman” and “Jacob Goldman, Beceiver,” and that he “indiscriminately has déposited in and expended for any and all purposes out of said bank accounts the funds of this and the other estates of which he has been appointed receiver”; that each and all of said court causes in which Myerson has been paid funds by Goldman, as receiver, “are pending in this court, and have been duly assigned to this judge for hearing and determination”; that Goldman has been removed as receiver in this and in each of the other court causes, and that the Chicago Title & Trust Company has been appointed receiver in all of the causes; that Myerson is, and at the happening of each occurrence was, an attorney at law, ‘ ‘ and as such an officer of this court practicing at the bar thereof,” and that he has appeared at the bar of this court as solicitor for Goldman, as receiver, in the administration of the respective estates in said causes. Then follow findings as to various sums of money, aggregating $4,883,25, found to have been paid to Myerson by Goldman, receiver, in said several court causes, said sums being mostly for legal services claimed to have been rendered by Myerson to Goldman. One item is for $49.75 for costs in the Ursus case, claimed to have been advanced by Myerson for Goldman, as receiver. Another item is for $340 received by Myerson from Goldman for legal services claimed to have been rendered by Myerson in the matter of Standard Dry Goods Store, wherein Goldman was acting as the voluntary assignee and the proceeds of the assets of the said estate were paid into the bank account carried in the name of “Jacob Goldman, Receiver,” and the check for said $340 was signed “Jacob Goldman, Receiver.” Another similar item is for $250, similarly paid, in the matter of the Garden City Tile Company, wherein Goldman was acting as voluntary assignee. Another item is for $500, paid to Myerson and claimed by him to have been paid “on account of general services rendered by him to Goldman, Receiver, in the above and other cases pending in the Circuit Court, said payment having been made by check signed 6 Jacob Goldman, Receiver,1 upon the bank account mentioned. ’ ’ Then follows: “The court makes no finding as to whether said payments were made as above claimed by said Myerson, but does find that each of said payments was made to said Myerson without any order of this court first and obtained, * * * authorizing the same and * * * that when said payments, and each of the same, were made * * * the said Myerson knew that the said Goldman had commingled the assets of the estates, of which he had been appointed receiver.” Then follows the finding: ‘ ‘ That, the premises considered, the said Harry J.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
238 Ill. App. 50, 1925 Ill. App. LEXIS 222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kneisel-v-ursus-motor-co-illappct-1925.